Yeah, I’d dye for you
Over the last couple of days my kitchen has turned into an occasional dye studio whilst I don rubber gloves and play with yarn and colour – possibly my two favourite things, and now I get to combine them. I blame Kismet’s Companion who started me down the path to Kool Aid dyeing, which led to experiments with food dyes and citric acid and now on to professional dyes.
As well as my first experience with professional dyes, I now have my first experience with laceweight yarn:

Satsuma Lace yarn, dyed by Eskimimi
This solid-dyed 100g of fine lace-weight yarn was actually completed five days ago, but it has taken me that long to hand-wind it into a ball. Ok, I haven’t been winding constantly all that time of course, but it seems like I have been winding it forever, and I breathed a sigh of long relief when I wound the last 200 yards or so this afternoon. If it takes that long to wind into a ball, how long will it take to knit? I will cross that bridge when I come to it.
The other yarn I dyed was a fingering weight sock yarn of 75% wool and 25% nylon – my favourite hard-wearing fibre combination for soft yet strong socks. This is a super-saturated, rich semi-solid range of greens. It’s a vibrant, rich green and I absolutely love it.

Broccoli Sockoli, dyed by Eskimimi
I’m going to be dyeing a few more skeins for friends over the next few days, but I am also thinking of listing a few yarns on Etsy if I am able to part with them. Every time I look at the rich colours I think of all that I could knit with them, and my mind is alive with all of the colours and combinations, variations and techniques I want to try out on the next skein of yarn.
Of course, it is time-consuming, requires patience, time and concentration, but I realise now why people love hand-dyed yarn – there is just an extra liveliness in a hand-dyed skein that is hard to explain but easy to appreciate.

Hand-dyed











